pietgriet2000_'s review

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adventurous informative reflective medium-paced

3.75

tommuir99's review against another edition

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adventurous informative tense fast-paced

4.75

angrywombat's review against another edition

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5.0

OK, I was flabbergasted by this! Roger Crowley has written a book totally unlike the dry history books I remember from high school and university.

This was a narrative recreated from primary sources about the 30-odd years of Portugal (a poor country at the ass end of europe) working out how to get into the indian ocean, and then exploiting it ruthlessly - but only thanks to a few cunning and intelligent men who worked out that the "medieval tactics" of europe would not work in the cosmopolitan world of the indian ocean.

I had never been exposed to this history before, and it was a real eye-opener. It gives lots of exposure to the various personalities of the time period, how they behaved, and the difficulties they encountered. It is a terrible account of some extreme atrocities (cities burned to the ground, women and children abducted, etc) but nonetheless amazing how a small group of portugese (in half rotten ships and only numbering in the thousands) were able to create an mercantile empire in such a short period of time - breaking the hold of Venice on the spice trade and destroying a muslim stranglehold on Indian-ocean trade.

This book was a mind-blowing revelation. These events instigated european colonialism throughout the world...

shim's review against another edition

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4.0

Very interesting history book about an era I knew relatively little about.

Some of the story is presented with a level of detail that seems unlikely to have been recorded and thus is presumably fabricated or exaggerated to make a more interesting narrative. Still, it’s a perfect book for casual readers or people looking for a general introduction. There were parts where I could have benefited from a bit more context.
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